Analyze the handwriting and look for fingerprints or DNA in case the perpetrator of the latest attacks had sent other letters with insults since the war began
The police analyze several critical letterssome even “in a threatening tone”, which the Government has received for its support measures for Ukraine since the war started. According to what CASO ABIERTO, the investigation and events channel of Prensa Ibérica, has learned, some of these letters are handwritten, so the investigators are going to compare the letter of those texts with that of the six packages received this week in case the author of these latest attacks had sent other letters with threats written before.
In addition, the Scientific Police is trying to recover fingerprints and DNA from the envelopes, those of the last letter and the previous ones, something that was not achieved in the last wave of threatening messages – on that occasion they were envelopes with bullets– The Minister of the Interior, Fernando Grande-Marlaska, the then Vice President Pablo Iglesias, the President of the Community of Madrid, Isabel Díaz-Ayuso and the director of the Civil Guard, Maria Gamezduring the spring of 2021.
Non-existent emails
As for the latest shipments, the police believe that they are the same author, who only wrote the name of the recipients and several emails as senders. The Police have already verified that these are non-existent addresses. Also, that all the letters would have been sent from Spanish territory.
As CASO ABIERTO announced, the first six letters sent: to the President of the Government, Pedro Sánchez, the Defense Minister, Margarita Robles, the United States embassy and the Ukrainian embassy in Madrid, the satellite center of the Torrejón de Ardoz and the Instalaza arms company, from Zaragoza, contained gunpowder and small amounts of shrapnel, according to the first data obtained by the investigators.
A seventh suspicious package was identified this Thursday afternoon at the Air Force Headquarters, in Madrid. The Police TEDAX detonated it, but finally verified that it did not contain any explosive material.